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Coloured DTI MRI scan showing white matter fibres in the brain of a patient with Alzheimer's disease.

Almost 60 million people globally have neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease.Credit: Mark & Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute/Science Photo Library

One gene to influence them all

A gene variant known to increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease also makes people vulnerable to a host of other age-related brain disorders, from Parkinson’s disease to motor neuron disease. Using a massive, newly-established proteomics database, researchers found that the variant, called APOE ε4, produces a distinct set of proteins that contribute to chronic inflammation. Environmental factors could make the difference between whether people with the gene go on to develop a certain degenerative brain condition or not, says study co-author and neuroscientist Caitlin Finney.

Nature | 4 min read

Reference: Nature Medicine paper 1 & paper 2

NIH to dismiss incoming grant reviewers

The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) will soon disinvite dozens of scientists who were about to take positions on advisory councils that make final decisions on grant applications for the agency. The move will leave advisory councils at most of the NIH’s institutes understaffed for an unknown period of time. NIH staff members have been instructed to nominate replacements that are aligned with the priorities of the administration of US President Donald Trump — and have been warned that political appointees might still override their suggestions and hand-pick alternative reviewers. The disinvited scientists had all passed the vetting process required for someone to take up one of these advisory positions, which will now have to re-start for new nominees.

Nature | 6 min read

Health data is fodder for low-quality papers

Data from five large open-access health databases are being used to generate thousands of poor-quality, formulaic papers. Researchers found that the number of studies using such databases rose from around 4,000 to 11,500 between 2021 and 2024. The spike could indicate that these data are being exploited by people using large language models to mass-produce scholarly articles, or even by paper mills that churn out papers to order.

Nature | 5 min read

Reference: medRxiv preprint (not peer reviewed)

‘Ammonite’ dims hopes of Planet Nine

The discovery of a distant rock at the fringes of the Solar System seems to reduce the likelihood that there’s an undiscovered planet out there. 2023 KQ14, nicknamed ‘Ammonite’, is only the fourth known example of a ‘sednoid’. These small bodies are like the dwarf planet Sedna: they orbit far beyond Neptune, are thought to have originated closer to the Sun, and have weird-shaped paths that suggest they have been ‘herded’ by the gravitational influence of a mysterious ninth planet. Ammonite’s orbit doesn’t align with the other sednoids, suggesting that ‘Planet Nine’ either doesn’t exist, was long-ago ejected from the Solar System, or is very far away — possibly 500 times farther from the Sun than Earth.

Forbes | 4 min read

Reference: Nature Astronomy paper

Features & opinion

A conceptual artistic representation of the Langlands Program made from a grid of triangles with swirling lines and arrows that merge to form solid shapes to convey the converging of different branches of mathematics.

Illustration: Andy Gilmore

The Langlands programme is a sort of Rosetta stone that allows researchers to translate between different fields of mathematics, making more problems solvable and revealing seemingly different concepts to be aspects of a deeper truth.

Inside mathematics’ ‘theory of everything’

The Langlands programme is a group of interconnected conjectures that is often hailed as the grand unified theory of mathematics — but it remains largely unproven. Last year, researchers unveiled a proof of a key piece — the geometric Langlands conjecture — and that accomplishment is now forging bridges between different mathematical lands. “It’s a huge triumph. But rather than closing a door, this proof throws open a dozen others,” says mathematician David Ben-Zvi.

Nature | 11 min read

Reference: arXiv preprint 1, preprint 2, preprint 3, preprint 4 & preprint 5

‘Living with bipolar motivates my research’

Mental illness cost Imtiaz Zafar almost a decade of his academic life. Now he works on a 1-billion-rupee (US$12-million) research project at the same mental-health institute where he was once a patient. “In my case, the diagnosis kept changing — from depression, then to schizophrenia, then to bipolar,” says Zafar. “This is why I do research across cell biology, genetics, molecular biology and bioinformatics, because misunderstanding it is so common.”

Nature | 6 min read

Prions: the shape-shifting protein

In his new book The Power of Prions, neuroscientist and biochemist Michel Brahic explores the shape-shifting proteins that cause ‘mad cow’ disease (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), and its human counterpart, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease. “It is now believed that every known neurodegenerative disease — from Alzheimer’s to Parkinson’s to ALS to Huntington’s to general dementia — involves a prion-like protein,” writes reviewer Stephen Buranyi. Yet prions remain fiendishly difficult to fully understand, with growing evidence that they do good as well as bad.

The London Review of Books | 14 min read

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“Some folks will find moving abroad attractive, but it is simply not possible for the 1.4 million US post-secondary instructors to just move to Canada.”

US-based academics are fighting to weather a perfect storm of financial instability, attacks on institutional autonomy, poorly prepared students, the assault of AI on traditional teaching and the erosion of their ability to travel and collaborate abroad, writes political scientist Paul Musgrave. (Systematic Hatreds newsletter | 7 min read)